SEATTLE — The script couldn’t be written any better. One final NFC West collision. One trip to Super Bowl LX on the line. When the Los Angeles Rams visit Lumen Field this Sunday to face the Seattle Seahawks, they aren’t just playing for a conference title—they are settling a season-long blood feud.
Kickoff is set for 6:30 p.m. ET on FOX, and the stakes are astronomical. The Seahawks (14-3) swept the NFC West crown, but the Rams (12-5) have been a buzzsaw in the playoffs, dispatching the Panthers and Bears to get here. Now, Matthew Stafford and Geno Smith meet for the third time this season in a rubber match that will echo in Pacific Northwest history.
The 12th Man vs. The McVay Offense
This matchup defines “Unstoppable Force vs. Immovable Object.” The Rams enter Sunday boasting the league’s top-ranked offense, averaging a staggering 30.5 points per game. Matthew Stafford has been surgical this postseason, throwing for over 560 yards in two games without a single turnover. His chemistry with Puka Nacua is telepathic; Nacua torched Chicago for 130 yards last week and looks ungovernable in single coverage.
But they are walking into the lions’ den. Seattle’s defense, orchestrated by head coach Mike Macdonald, allowed the fewest points in the NFL (17.2 ppg) this year. The “Legion of Boom 2.0” has been suffocating, led by the secondary’s ability to disguise coverages late into the play clock. If the Rams want to book a flight to Levi’s Stadium for Super Bowl LX, they have to communicate through the deafening noise of the 12th Man.
“We know what it’s like up there. It’s loud, it’s wet, it’s hostile. But we didn’t come this far to let a little noise send us home. We’re here to take the crown.” — Matthew Stafford, Rams Quarterback
The X-Factor: Jaxon Smith-Njigba
While all eyes are on the quarterbacks, the game might swing on the legs of Jaxon Smith-Njigba. The Seahawks’ dynamic playmaker shattered franchise receiving records this season and has been Geno Smith’s safety valve on third down. The Rams’ defense has struggled against slot speed, and if Macdonald can isolate Smith-Njigba on a linebacker, Seattle will move the chains at will.
Playoff Implications / What’s Next
The winner punches their ticket to Super Bowl LX on February 8 at Levi’s Stadium to face the AFC Champion. For Seattle, it would be their first Super Bowl trip since the Russell Wilson era. For the Rams, it’s a chance to secure a second ring for Stafford and cement McVay’s dynasty. Expect a physical, low-scoring first half that explodes in the fourth quarter.
Prediction: The Rams’ offense is hot, but Seattle’s home-field advantage at Lumen Field is the great equalizer. In a game decided by turnovers, the Seahawks’ defense makes one more play.

